Cultural differences on seeking information: an eye tracking study

Citació

  • Marcos MC, García-Gavilanes R, Bataineh E, Pasarin L. Cultural differences on seeking information: an eye tracking study. In: CIH'13: Workshop Many People, Many Eyes; April 27-May 2, 2013; Paris, France.

Enllaç permanent

Descripció

  • Resum

    The main goal of this research is to investigate how people with different cultural background differ in their interaction style and visual behavior on search engine results pages (SERP), more specifically between groups from the Middle Eastern region vs. Western Europe. We conducted a controlled eye-tracking experiment to explore and evaluate the visual behavior of Arabs and Spaniard/nusers when scanning through the first page of the search results in Google. Big differences can be observed in the 4 aspects studied: U.A.E. participants stayed on the SERPs for longer, they read more results and they read each snippet in a more complete way than Spaniards. In Spain, people tended to scan the SERP, reading less text on each snippet, and choose a result among the first top ranked/nones without hardly seeing those in bottom positions.
  • Mostra el registre complet